6533b831fe1ef96bd12982d3
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Phenomenological Ideas in Latvia: Kurt Stavenhagen and Theodor Celms on Husserl’s Transcendental Phenomenology
Juris Rozenvaldssubject
Phenomenology (philosophy)PsychoanalysisHistoryTranscendental numberSocial scienceTranscendental philosophydescription
It is commonly known that after the publication of Husserl’s Logical Investigations a great number of students from different countries came to Gottingen and, after 1916, to Freiburg to study phenomenology with Husserl. Among them were students from the Baltic states. The best-known of them, Avon Gurwitsch and Emmanuel Levinas, left their native country Lithuania to study and never came back. Their subsequent philosophical careers were connected with the United States and France, respectively. Quite different is the case of Husserl’s students from Latvia. Unlike E. Levinas and A. Gurwitsch, all of them returned to Latvia after their studies in Gottingen and Freiburg. Therefore it is possible to speak about a particular branch of phenomenology in Latvia, which, on the one hand, was closely connected with tendencies and discussions within the phenomenological movement, and, on the other hand, reflected specific features of the social and cultural life in Latvia.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
---|---|---|---|---|
2000-01-01 |